Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

goldfinger - 09 Jun 2005 12:25

Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).

Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.

cheers GF.

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 14:29 - 19322 of 81564

benefits should never be paid in cash
and they should be cut
only disabled benefits should be index linked

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 14:45 - 19323 of 81564

if osborne had cut benefits more i would of returned to being a con
cut the benefits cut family allowance to two kids .
and freeze it for 5 years .and dole money

Stan - 05 Dec 2012 14:54 - 19324 of 81564

I can see that your easily pleased then.

doodlebug - 05 Dec 2012 14:55 - 19325 of 81564

Ed Balls an utter disaster this afternoon - Milliband almost looked embarrassed.

dreamcatcher - 05 Dec 2012 14:58 - 19326 of 81564

Fred wont like that.

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 15:12 - 19327 of 81564

he should of froze benefits for 10 years get the lazy yobs to get a job
vouchers for second and clothes and food vouchers for food
and make them get them for all to see .via out side tesco store

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 15:15 - 19328 of 81564

stan if you are fit for work then make them work even if it is sweeping the paths
anything other than doing nothing and make it 8.til 5 ever day mon to fir .
now that would be good news
that is why i am a right wing tory

dreamcatcher - 05 Dec 2012 15:19 - 19329 of 81564

Chancellor ready to give 'long overdue' boost to AIM
2:47 pm by John Harrington The move could give a shot in the arm to AIM, which houses many of Britain’s most innovative and entrepreneurial companies.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, is pondering a move which could give a boost to companies on AIM, Britain’s junior stock market.

In his Autumn Statement on Wednesday, Osborne said he will be consulting on a change to the rules of ISAs (individual savings accounts) to see whether AIM-listed companies could be included in equity ISAs.

The move could give a shot in the arm to AIM (LON:LSE), which houses many of Britain’s most innovative and entrepreneurial companies.

Matt Butlin, head of Equities at Allenby Capital, a broker with a focus on AIM-listed companies, welcomed the move, saying it was “long overdue” and should “give a boost to liquidity”.

The broker’s most recent monthly review of AIM showed the market contracted further in terms of members, with five new entrants and 10 departures in October.

On a brighter note, £253mln in capital was raised on AIM in October, the highest monthly total since March of this year.

In a widely expected move, the chancellor also confirmed he is consulting on tax incentives for shale gas exploration.

The government intends to set up an Office for Unconventional Gas to ensure the UK makes best use of its natural gas resources.

‘The government’s gas generation strategy will set out its view of the expected role for gas in the coming years. The government expects up to 26 gigawatts of new gas capacity could be required by 2030 on current carbon budgets,” Osborne said.

In other moves, the chancellor gave plenty of choices for headline writers to pick over, among them a tax grab on pensions, a cut in corporation tax and an initiative to ensure multi-national corporations pay more tax on their UK earnings.

Osborne ruled out a new tax on properties, which he said would be expensive to run and an irresistible temptation to future chancellors to pull more houses into the tax net.

Although it will likely be reported as a raid on pensions, Osborne’s decision to cut annual tax relief on pensions to £40,000 from £50,000 is not so much a pensions grab as a reduction in the tax-man’s largesse towards high earners.

The chancellor announced his intention to cut UK corporation tax by one percentage point to 21% from April, enabling him to trot out the old “Britain is open for business” cliché while publicising how low Britain’s rate is compared to numerous key competitors.

The pledge to ensure multi-national companies “pay their fair share” of taxes in this country, with the chancellor targeting an extra £2bn a year in revenues, will probably play well, as will the decision to cancel the 3p per litre rise in petrol duty planned for January.

Both measures may distract attention from the widely expected downgrades to forecasts of economic growth.

The statement confirmed that the Office for Budgetary Responsibility (OBR) has cut its forecasts for economic growth – or contraction, as it is set to be in 2012. The OBR is predicting UK gross domestic product (GDP) will fall 0.1% across 2012.

The OBR’s forecasts for GDP growth are: +1.2% in 2013; +2% in 2014; +2.3% in 2015; +2.7% in 2016; +2.8% in 2017.

Osborne said he will meet his target of cutting he burden of public debt, only the new target date is 2016, not “the end of the current life of its parliament,” i.e. 2015, which was the previous target date.

Stan - 05 Dec 2012 15:19 - 19330 of 81564

No you mean extremist.

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 15:39 - 19331 of 81564

dream lets hope we get it picking the right aim could be very good .
i like a few .

Fred1new - 05 Dec 2012 15:46 - 19332 of 81564

doodle,

You must be from another planet.

Osborne is gambling and stoking up problems for the coalition just before the next elections.

Wait for Economic figures in the next quarter.

dreamcatcher - 05 Dec 2012 15:47 - 19333 of 81564

Am I missing something on the Isa Announcement - Is there not going to be a lot of tax lost for the country ? More like someone posted earlier, its to save the dwindling aim market by enticing investors.

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 15:55 - 19334 of 81564

it all depends what you buy i have 4 good ones to dip isa in .
that 23k for me and the wife .

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 15:57 - 19335 of 81564

fred he should of cut benefits by 10% today that is the problem he is to much of a wimp cut the benefits today .

dreamcatcher - 05 Dec 2012 15:58 - 19336 of 81564

You will have people on the streets then, will you not ? Be serious its no good saying
its their fault.

doodlebug - 05 Dec 2012 15:59 - 19337 of 81564

Fred, yes I just arrived from Pluto and I thought Goofy could have done a better job than Balls today.

dreamcatcher - 05 Dec 2012 16:02 - 19338 of 81564

Balls is Labour, they are never wrong with Fred :-))

TANKER - 05 Dec 2012 16:04 - 19339 of 81564

the lazy dossers have had it to good .
why should good people have to get to work spend at least 10 hours aday away from home and the lazy bastards have for years done nothing.
it is time after 12 months give them vouchers for charity shops and vouchers for food parcels .then see how many find a job.

Stan - 05 Dec 2012 16:24 - 19340 of 81564

Leave Cameron, Osborne and Johnson out of this -):

Fred1new - 05 Dec 2012 17:01 - 19341 of 81564

Dreams,

There are none so blind as those who don't wish to see.

Have a look at some of my earlier postings.

-------------------

Some of those living on social benefits may be defrauding the state, but many are not and many are barely subsiding on the "handouts".

There are many sitting on their arses pressing buttons on money they have not earned for themselves and living comfortably.

Also some who while earning "decent" incomes are defrauding the state.

------------------------------

i would prefer to live in a society comfortable with itself, rather than one where you have to look the other way or fearful. That is a more equitable society with decent or humane social standards.

-----------------------------

I often wished I could look around corners at the future, rather than guess at them.

I think Ed Balls is proving right in his economic projections and Osborne and Cameron will be proved wrong and disasters.

I hope I am wrong.
Register now or login to post to this thread.